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  1. The EGE

    "Dirty Old Boston"

    And of course there's the 1915 East Boston plan, which called for a giant new port where Logan now is, a major expansion of Wood Island Park, Blue Line branches to Chelsea and to the BRB&L, a freight rail tunnel to South Boston, a road tunnel to downtown, and much more...
  2. The EGE

    "Dirty Old Boston"

    There were a number of different 19th century plans for the South Boston Flats. This one from 1866 would have also extended the wharves near Rowes Wharf towards a realigned Fort Point Channel:
  3. The EGE

    MBTA Commuter Rail (Operations, Keolis, & Short Term)

    If the problem is salty water pooling at crossings, it seems that an effort to slightly change the grade of offending crossings - so that they're slightly higher than the surrounding roadway - might be useful and relatively affordable. And/or target these crossings for drainage improvements.
  4. The EGE

    Connected/Automated vehicles and infrastructure in Boston

    It seems to be random, often midblock, as if the computer locked up and a human took over. No obvious pattern from what I've seen.
  5. The EGE

    MBTA Construction Projects

    2004 PMT, pages 5C-68 and -69: https://web.archive.org/web/20110928225806/http://www.bostonmpo.org/bostonmpo/pmt-old/PMT-4.pdf While I'm a bit suspicious of the projections, the area is very different than it was in 2004: In 2004 the triangle was mostly commercial clustered around the Red...
  6. The EGE

    Connected/Automated vehicles and infrastructure in Boston

    As a current SF resident, the Waymos are pretty awful. They almost entirely pick up and drop off in travel lanes - there does not seem to be any effort to have them pull to the curb even if space is available. Any pickup/dropoff on a busy street blocks traffic and transit. That also means they...
  7. The EGE

    Underground station layouts

    Ashnot, these are INCREDIBLE. I've been avoiding these two for a while because of their weird layouts and the lack of good plans available. How did you manage to make them?
  8. The EGE

    MBTA Construction Projects

    I think there's a potential market specifically because it wouldn't be colocated with the Red Line station - a station with access from Alewife Brook Parkway and Wheeler (both sides of the tracks) could serve the south side of the tracks rather better. There's been a fair bit of development...
  9. The EGE

    MBTA Fare System (Charlie, AFC 2.0, Zone, Discounts)

    That's a big aspect that doesn't seem to be successful (yet): how quickly a crowd of people can go through the gates. On the rapid transit system, the faregates read cards fast and open fast. From my limited experience, the North Station gates seemed much slower.
  10. The EGE

    General MBTA Topics (Multi Modal, Budget, MassDOT)

    Bus lanes, bus bulbs, and transit signal priority. If you can save 10% of cycle time* on a route that uses 10 buses, you can run the same service with 9 buses. Or run 10 buses on shorter headways and attract more riders. *Cycle time is the scheduled time for round trip travel time, plus...
  11. The EGE

    General Infrastructure

    I stumbled across a 2024 FTA facilities inventory. Filtered it down to the MBTA, colored by mode, here it is. It's definitely not 100% reliable - some locations are clearly in the wrong place - but definitely provides some interesting information about the individual buildings at yards.
  12. The EGE

    Alewife T Station, Garage, Bus, & Trails

    And the frustrating part is that it could be good! It has gorgeous tile floors, a (normally) airy atrium, and some of the best public art on the system. The station interior itself doesn't need much more than basic maintenance and better lighting. As for everything else, besides better...
  13. The EGE

    Transit history/trivia quiz

    And the remaining answers: 2: Mass Ave between Harvard and North Cambridge (routes 79 and 82, now route 77 and 77A), and Warren Street between Dudley and Walnut Avenue (routes 19, 22, 23, and 44). Warren is still one of the busiest bus corridors, with about 20 per hour in each direction at rush...
  14. The EGE

    Fantasy T maps

    For whatever reason, the crosstown lines (predecessors of the modern 47 and 91) went through Central rather than Harvard. Harvard didn't have any crosstown service until the bus era.
  15. The EGE

    Transit history/trivia quiz

    2: Still open. If we're including bus frequency, I'm sure that section of Talbot (and maybe Huntington) would be in the sub-minute frequency range. However, only two of the routes on that part of Talbot, and only one on that part of Huntington, were streetcars. 4.1: Correct. The was a horsecar...
  16. The EGE

    Transit history/trivia quiz

    Last call for guesses, otherwise I'll post the answers sometime Monday afternoon. I try to make these quizzes hard but not too hard! The answers to 4.1 and 6, and some clues to 2, can be found in old maps. 2 and 6 are definitely mentioned in BSRA books as well. Everything in 10 comes from public...
  17. The EGE

    Roads and Highways General Development Thread

    Anecdotally, it seems a much higher percentage of them live in the suburbs and drive to work compared to their equivalents at the MBTA or the city transportation departments. And not just the greybeards either - I once attended a meetup for young(ish) transportation professionals, and met a...
  18. The EGE

    Transit history/trivia quiz

    Great work you two! One or both of you got most correct; a few still remain open. 1: Ratmeister got both. Prior to 1987, there was no Dudley-Mattapan route. (The 1 was [re]created in 1962 as a through-routing of existing services. The extension of the 66 to Harvard was during the MBTA era, but...
  19. The EGE

    Transit history/trivia quiz

    The key routes designated in 2004-05 (routes 1, 15, 22, 23, 28, 32, 39, 57, 66, 71, 73, 77, 111, 116, 117) are largely replaced in MBTA publications with the frequent routes. Some questions about them (and BNRD): Which two routes were created during the MBTA era? Which of them was on a routing...
  20. The EGE

    Roads and Highways General Development Thread

    Obviously I'm in the "transit + ped + bike should always be priorities" camp, but this location is especially important. It's such a choke point for so many modes, with no alternate routes for a mile on either side. The vast majority of auto trips through the intersection can and should be...

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